within the next 6 months mammoth will have a moderate to severe eruption and will place them mountain unskiable for a good 2 or 3 years...so ski up this year

-let people do what they want, ski how you want, make whoever you want your role model its your choice
-i love to ski, so should you, its fun, try it sometime
-thats what the internet is for anonymously slandering people-jason lee

Yeah St Helens and Hood and Mammoth are all going 2 blow up and earthquakes will fallow soon after all over Cali and its going to finally go under fucking water with all of the pricks that live in that state muah hahahahahahah

If Mammoth does blow the mountain it self isn't gonna be spewing lava. The valley floor will be though. If any of you fockers have been there and seen the 'scenic route' that connects to hwy 395, well it used to be called the 'escape route'. But that name scared LA tourons so they changed it. The escape route is there because if Mammoth goes it's gonna go just about at the junction of 395 and Mammoth Rd. The escape route goes around the town to enable people to still get to 395 and get the fuck out of Mammoth. The town will be fucked, but the mountain's gonna be fine.

mammoth blows its top
ash/dust gets caught in jet stream
condenses over green mountains as cloud seed
snow pukes on mountains of vermont, new hampshire, maine, and quebec
clausen pukes on himself after he finds himself homeless
cj pukes on whistler after pounding 151 in disgust after being out-snowed by the east for the first time ever
everybody on the east coast pukes... sick!!!

If Mammoth were to erupt, it would'nt have a lava flow. Western US volcanoes are caldera type eruptions associted with high viscosity magma that erupts in a pyroclastic flow of ash and other debris. You can outrun lava, but pyroclastic flow travels at up to 600 mph. If people were in the town, they would all be fucked and would be entombed like the people of Pompeii. The mountain would probobly blow its lid, too and be completely warped.

Not to worry though, they monitor seismic activity pretty damn well in CA and it's not going to happen. Cascade range volcanoes like Baker or Hood are a different story though...

i heard you guys are all full of shit nothing is going to happen to mammoth
Not wearing poles is alot like getting a blowjob from a guy...It feels good until you look down and realize you're gay. - skimack

its not a galcier its a semi-dormant volcano, due to erupt in the next 6 months...berkely predicted it, the predicted 3 earthquakes with in a month and 2 pacific volcanoe eruptions with in a week, so ski up

-let people do what they want, ski how you want, make whoever you want your role model its your choice
-i love to ski, so should you, its fun, try it sometime
-thats what the internet is for anonymously slandering people-jason lee

Mammoth Mountain, a young volcano on the rim of Long Valley Caldera, was built by numerous eruptions between 220,000 and 50,000 years ago. Volcanoes in the Mono-Inyo Craters volcanic chain, which extends from just south of Mammoth Mountain to the north shore of Mono Lake, have erupted often over the past 40,000 years. During the last 5,000 years, an eruption has broken out somewhere along this chain every 250 to 700 years. The Inyo Craters and nearby lava domes were formed by a series of small to moderate eruptions 550 to 600 years ago, and the most recent eruptions along the volcanic chain took place about 250 years ago at Paoha Island in Mono Lake.

The pattern of volcanic activity over the past 5,000 years suggests that the next eruption in the Long Valley area will most likely happen somewhere along the Mono-Inyo volcanic chain. However, the probability of such an eruption occurring in any given year is less than 1%. This is comparable to the annual chance of a magnitude 8 earthquake (like the Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake) along the San Andreas Fault in coastal California or of an eruption from one of the more active Cascade Range volcanoes in the Pacific Northwest, such as Mount Rainier.

As long as increased volcanic unrest (including earthquake swarms, ground deformation, and CO2 gas emissions) continues in the Long Valley area, the chances of an eruption occurring in the near future will remain somewhat increased. However, evidence from large volcanic areas and calderas worldwide shows that unrest, such as the current activity in eastern California, can persist for decades or even centuries without leading to an eruption. Nevertheless, recent eruptions at Rabaul Caldera in Papua New Guinea (1994) and the Izu volcanic complex in Japan (1989) following short periods of unrest emphasize the need to closely monitor restless calderas.

Mammoth Mountain, a young volcano on the rim of Long Valley Caldera, was built by numerous eruptions between 220,000 and 50,000 years ago. Volcanoes in the Mono-Inyo Craters volcanic chain, which extends from just south of Mammoth Mountain to the north shore of Mono Lake, have erupted often over the past 40,000 years. During the last 5,000 years, an eruption has broken out somewhere along this chain every 250 to 700 years. The Inyo Craters and nearby lava domes were formed by a series of small to moderate eruptions 550 to 600 years ago, and the most recent eruptions along the volcanic chain took place about 250 years ago at Paoha Island in Mono Lake.

The pattern of volcanic activity over the past 5,000 years suggests that the next eruption in the Long Valley area will most likely happen somewhere along the Mono-Inyo volcanic chain. However, the probability of such an eruption occurring in any given year is less than 1%. This is comparable to the annual chance of a magnitude 8 earthquake (like the Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake) along the San Andreas Fault in coastal California or of an eruption from one of the more active Cascade Range volcanoes in the Pacific Northwest, such as Mount Rainier.

As long as increased volcanic unrest (including earthquake swarms, ground deformation, and CO2 gas emissions) continues in the Long Valley area, the chances of an eruption occurring in the near future will remain somewhat increased. However, evidence from large volcanic areas and calderas worldwide shows that unrest, such as the current activity in eastern California, can persist for decades or even centuries without leading to an eruption. Nevertheless, recent eruptions at Rabaul Caldera in Papua New Guinea (1994) and the Izu volcanic complex in Japan (1989) following short periods of unrest emphasize the need to closely monitor restless calderas.

15 years old... you cant even take the girl anywhere... you have to get laid in the back of your... bicycle? or bring your parents along... or get a ride... hey mommy, i need a ride over to my bitch's house so i can fuck her.
-crystal-needs-a-park

id be pretty stoked if mammoth lakes got melted... that town sucks.
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